Saturday, November 4, 2023

Norris Dam 25K Race, 11-4-23

This has been a tough year for my running habit. Soon after Barkley I realized that I’d come down with Plantar Fasciitis. I’d had soreness in my feet for a while, especially in my left heel while running downhill, but I didn’t relate that to what I’d heard about PF. Then one day I woke up with pain in the center of my heels that was serious enough to make me realize the connection. Luckily, this was well after Barkley, and its subsequent bookmobiles, so I had a lull in my schedule coming up. I started to do the stretching, icing, etc. that Leonard and other friends had recommended. The pain didn’t go away, but at least it didn’t get any worse.

Passing the Grist Mill (photo from KTC).

Before our May trip to the Black Hills, (Black Elk Pk) I took about two weeks off from running hoping for a cure, but early on in the trip I found that any hike over 6-8 miles would aggravate the PF. After I got back, I made a quick trip to my doctor who sent me to physical therapy. At PT we tried most everything in the book. I got 2 sessions of dry needling, the first helped a lot, the second didn’t. Each session he did some soft tissue massage, scraping, cupping, and a taping job that would last 2-3 days. I got a Superfeet insole and a regime of stretching and strengthening. I also cut back on my running distance and frequency. I got better up to the point that I could run normally, but I still had the pain and couldn’t increase my running. For the next step I added the “night split”, in this case a Strasburg sock, went on Meloxicam (NSAID) daily, and added more stretching and strengthening. Things were looking good when I got released from PT, but I still had the PF.

Next up I was scheduled to sweep the Barkley Fall Classic in late September. Sweeping is a bit of crap shoot, but I figured I needed to go as far as 18 miles. My longest training trip was ~14.4 miles on FHSP’s North Boundary Trail, out and back to Bald Knob. My heel hurt badly after that run, but it was OK the following day. At BFC I did 18 slow miles and didn’t have much PF Pain.

My PF stayed about the same through our ND Badlands hiking trip in early October (Achenbach Hike). I was still able to run my usual 8 mile greenway runs. Then it was just month to the Knoxville Track Club’s Norris Dam Hard Trail Race. The last two years I’d run the 50K at Norris, but I’d put in lots of training. I knew the 25K would be tough on the PF, but made it my goal just to finish. I did several 10-12 mile training runs at the Townsend Y in the Smokies, South Knoxville, and at Norris, along with a couple sets of hill repeats from Armes Gap at Frozen Head. My fitness was good going in, but I knew from my final training run at Norris that the PF would be the toughest challenge.

Race morning was cold with the start near freezing, but warmer temperatures forecasted by noon. The race this year was on the clockwise loop, which meant we would do the flatter Lakeview section first, and would have the hills toward the end of the loop. From the start the runners got bunched up descending the stairs below the Tea House. The second set of stairs on Kerry’s Revenge had been bypassed by a new trail relocation, so we had a much gentler descent to Lakeview Trail. I soon ended up at the head of one of a small group. I asked a couple of times if people wanted to pass, and since there were no takers I just kept to the front and tried to run a decent pace.

Early on I could tell I would be able to run well. Maybe not fast, but I could go steadily, and could climb the short rollers on Lakeview when I wanted to. Not too far into the run I realized Kathy Smith was in the group, so that confirmed that I had to be running well. The Lakeview section of the course is long and rolling, so it seems to take much longer than it should. Most of the runners ahead of us were walking the “steeper” climbs so our group did the same. Much of the trail at the start in the State Park had been blown clear of leaves, and this was a great help. We all could run faster with less worries about rocks and roots, and I could do more even foot plants which would delay the flare up of the pain from my plantar fasciitis. The group stayed together through High Point Trail and began to split up along Arnie’s/Benny’s trails, just before the Clear Creek Road section.

Our group on the Lakeview Trail (Photo from KTC).

Kathy and I stuck together to the first aid station at the base of Eli Nine, coming in around 1:27, which was about 10 minutes ahead of what I hoped was a 4 hour pace. We continued a walk/run up Eli Nine, but maybe cut back more than I should have. But it was all running down Red Hill and on the more technical trail on White Oak Spring Trail. After Red Hill we would see no other runners until the top of Ridgeline. There were no leaf blown sections in the watershed. Somewhere on Clear Creek Trail I went knee deep into hole just about a foot wide. Luckily I just took a tumble without hurting anything. We went back and cleared away the leaves around the hole for other runners to see, and then headed for the water tank.

Kathy and I running near Lower Clear Creek (photo from KTC).

Kathy called the aid crew at the water tank aid station (~2:15) the dream team (Brian W, Tim H, and Alondra M.) and I commented that the race had more talent at the aid stations than on the course. We cruised down Lower Clear Creek and then to the Grist Mill, still moving well. But I chose to walk almost all of Cliff Trail. The trail is uphill, but not all the way, and is narrow with a drop off, but not dangerously so. My caution here might have cost me the few minutes I needed to have broken 4 hours.

Kathy and Leah have a ritual of sipping of Fireball at Observation Point when they run this race together, and Kathy asked me to join her in Leah’s place this year. A lone hiker at the gazebo got a laugh at our “Shot and Selfie.”

Celebrating at Observation Point.

We ran steadily, if not so fast, down from Reservoir Hill to the dream team at around 3:20, too slow I thought to break 4 hours. But Kathy and I still could climb, and we hustled up Ridgeline though not quite at the ”back in the day” pace. Near the top we caught one runner worn out by the climbing. My foot was too sore by now to run fast, but I could still sort of pussy foot along. The new single track to Camp Sam was great to run, not so much so for the paved road through the cabin area to the finish. We swung into the finish just over four hours, but had more than enough fun to make up for the slower time.